One of the best restaurants in NJ, Frog and The Peach offers corporate lunch, outdoor dining, wine tasting dinners, and more!

Garden State's juicy crop is ripe for the picking


By BILL PITCHER
BERGEN RECORD STAFF WRITER


Chilled lobster with vanilla-peach vinaigrette; goat cheese with peach compote; shrimp and pork belly with a peach-chipotle glaze ... yes, Bruce Lefebvre is trying to paint the town peach. He’s the executive chef at The Frog and the Peach restaurant in New Brunswick, and Friday he’s also the guest chef at the James Beard House in New York, where he’ll showcase the sweet and savory diversity of one of New Jersey’s most celebrated home-grown crops.

But his ideal peach application isn’t in the peach clafoutis he’ll serve to chefs, critics and other food experts on Friday, and it’s not in the peach honey over sheep’s cheese or the shrimp with a ginger-peach glaze he serves to customers who request his summer peach menu. It’s found beneath a salad of arugula, duck confit, spiced almonds and prosecco wine vinaigrette: five thin rounds sliced from a raw, unseasoned, unmolested New Jersey peach.
 
“I just like them raw,” he said.

It’s prime time for peaches, as South Jersey farms rush their crop to supermarkets in “Jersey Fresh” boxes and North Jersey orchards start supplying farmers’ markets. But for real “Jersey Fresh,” and the purest taste of summer, skip the supermarket, bypass the farm stand and head straight to the source.

Standing alongside row after row of peach trees at his hillside farm in Harding, which faces the Watchung Mountains, Ken Wightman said that there’s no comparing peaches pulled straight from the tree with the peaches you bag in the grocery store.

“Most of what you buy in supermarkets is not as good as a peach that’s taken from here and eaten,” he said. “You can’t beat that flavor anywhere else.” It’s not just the flavor. It’s the juice, too.
“Get them from the tree and they’re going to have more juice because they’re riper and they’re going to have more sweetness,” said Peter Demarest, owner of Demarest Farms, who has about 12 acres of more than 20 types of peach trees in Hillsdale and Saddle River.

“When you bite into that peach, juice should be running down your chin,” he added.

Finding ripe peaches on trees is easier than finding ripe ones in a supermarket, Demarest said. That’s because peaches picked for market are mature — not fully ripened — so they won’t bruise during packing, shipping and stocking.
 
Look for a peach with reddish cheeks and a bright yellow background, he said. A reddish background means the peach isn’t quite ripe. “And feel it,” he added. “It has to be relatively firm so it doesn’t bruise when you put it in the bag.”

And, says Wightman, when you find a ripe peach, your nose knows. Give it a sniff at the stem. The aroma may be overwhelming.

“There is nothing like that smell,” he said.

Wightman and Demarest grow more than 20 varieties of peaches and their offspring, nectarines, from familiar yellow to spicy, doughnut-shaped white peaches, largely because each variety ripens at different times. They began picking peaches around the Fourth of July, and they’ll be going through Labor Day. This week alone, Demarest expects to pick 25,000 pounds, all destined for his market and others in North Jersey.

Peach carpaccio with duck confit, baby arugula and spiced almonds

2 ripe peaches, peeled
2 tablespoons olive oil
1½ cups shredded duck confit
4 cups arugula, loosely packed
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
¼ cup prosecco vinaigrette, plus more for finishing
½ cup spiced almonds, coarsely chopped

Slice peaches lengthwise into rounds, slicing as thinly as possible. Arrange rounds in a circular pattern on four plates.

Pour olive oil into a sauté pan and heat until smoking. Add the duck confit and cook until crisp, stirring occasionally, about four minutes. Remove from heat and reserve.

Place the arugula in a bowl and season with salt and pepper. Add the prosecco vinaigrette, and toss until each arugula leaf is lightly coated with dressing. Place a quarter of the arugula on top of the peaches on each plate. Equally divide the warm confit over the greens. Garnish with spiced almonds and a drizzle of the vinaigrette.

Servings: 4
Note: Duck confit is available at most specialty food stores and many supermarkets.

Prosecco vinaigrette

1 bottle prosecco wine (reserve ½ cup for finishing)
2 small shallots, peeled and diced
1 pasteurized organic egg yolk
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon champagne vinegar
¼ cup fresh lemon juice
8 ice cubes
3½ cups grapeseed or corn oil
Salt and white pepper to taste

Click here to find more recipes from The Frog and The Peach.

The Frog and The Peach is open daily for dinner and for lunch Monday through Friday. 
The restaurant is located in downtown New Brunswick at 29 Dennis Street at Hiram Square.
For reservations, please call 732. 846-3216.

The Frog and The Peach Press Home

Copyright © 2007 The Frog and the Peach. All Rights Reserved